She finished her first year in high style. Yesterday brushed the heat exchanger tubes, vacuumed the smoke box, scraped as best I could the firebox, cleaned out all the ash from the firebox and gasification chamber, vacuumed everything, sealed up the smoke outlet, sealed the air inlet, cleaned the chimney, and put her to bed until Fall. The refractory looks to be in real great shape. Burned pine the whole season with just this one chimney cleaning, very little buildup - she does her job well.
Any thoughts from others on the creosote in the firebox that doesn't scrape off? It would be ideal to get to bare metal, but I don't think scraping can do that. A layer of creosote remains well bonded to the steel. My guess is that sealing the boiler from moisture will greatly limit an ongoing creosote caused corrosion.
Any thoughts from others on the creosote in the firebox that doesn't scrape off? It would be ideal to get to bare metal, but I don't think scraping can do that. A layer of creosote remains well bonded to the steel. My guess is that sealing the boiler from moisture will greatly limit an ongoing creosote caused corrosion.